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Myth vs. reality: food safety and your local family farm: Peter Marks sets the record straight.


Try this quiz. Which food is more likely to make you sick? A) food from a family farm, grown in home-based, rural conditions, unwashed or minimally-washed, bagged by hand in a back shed and driven to market in an old pickup truck or B) food from a highly-regulated processing facility in California's Salinas Valley The Salinas Valley in the Central Coast region of California lies along the Salinas River between the Gabilan Range and the Santa Lucia Range. It encompasses parts of Monterey County. , where professionally-run harvest crews adhere to adhere to
verb 1. follow, keep, maintain, respect, observe, be true, fulfil, obey, heed, keep to, abide by, be loyal, mind, be constant, be faithful

2.
 strict sanitation standards, processing facilities are "clean rooms" with no outside air coming in, unfiltered Please wikify (format) this article or section as suggested in the Guide to layout and the Manual of Style.
Remove this template after wikifying. This article has been tagged since
 wash-water is supplemented with a carefully monitored chlorine level and then removed in multiple rinses, bags are filled by stainless-steel machines, and vacuum-packing seals the food product for the rest of its journey from farm to table?

The answer requires careful examination of fact and fiction, as there are many misconceptions about how our food becomes contaminated contaminated,
v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material.
2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials.
3. an infective surface or object.
. Here in the Southern Appalachians, this month brings the eagerly awaited opening of many of our farmers' tailgate A conversion layer that lets IDE devices connect to the IEEE 1394 Firewire interface.  markets. Spinach and leafy greens are staples of the spring offerings of many produce vendors. Eight months after a deadly E. coli E. coli: see Escherichia coli.
E. coli
 in full Escherichia coli

Species of bacterium that inhabits the stomach and intestines. E. coli can be transmitted by water, milk, food, or flies and other insects.
 outbreak in 26 states was linked to spinach, spinach sales are still down in all settings. Let's separate myth from reality as to what food truly causes sickness, and maybe you'll get your appetite for spinach back.

MYTH 1: DIRT AND WILD ANIMALS WILD ANIMALS. Animals in a state of nature; animals ferae naturae. Vide Animals; Ferae naturae.  ARE TO BLAME

As shoppers, we have come to expect sparkling-clean produce that seems to need no more than a quick rinse, and many of us associate this visual cleanliness with food safety. But, that shiny, sparkling-clean produce may not be as clean as it looks. A rarely spoken FDA FDA
abbr.
Food and Drug Administration


FDA,
n.pr See Food and Drug Administration.

FDA,
n.pr the abbreviation for the Food and Drug Administration.
 guideline tells us we should wash all fresh produce with warm water and soap--a guideline that exists to remove dirt and agricultural chemicals and to reduce the risk I of food-borne illness Food-borne illness
A disease that is transmitted by eating or handling contaminated food.

Mentioned in: Campylobacteriosis, Shigellosis
. When it comes to food-borne illnesses like E. coli, dirt isn't the problem. Almost all of the fruits and vegetables we eat are grown in dirt. Dirt is the good stuff; we should eat more of it. The problem is bodily waste.

If the problem is bodily waste, whose waste is it? Among other sources, National Public Radio reported this winter that "it is widely believed" that the spinach contamination originated from wild pigs that wandered onto a spinach field and defecated there. Not "the FDA has proven," not "scientists have established," only "it is widely believed."

In fact, what scientists have established is that cattle kept near the implicated im·pli·cate  
tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates
1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot.

2.
 spinach field tested positive for the strain of E. coli that caused the outbreak. They also found a wild pig wandering around near the field (months after the outbreak) that tested positive for the same strain.

Clearly, somebody's been playing a careful game of "who's best to blame." If we blame the cattle, we'll raise public awareness about the fact that most of our nation's pre-cut leafy green produce is grown in close quarters close quarters
Noun, pl

at close quarters
a. engaged in hand-to-hand combat

b. very near together

Noun 1.
 with industrial-scale dairy and beef production. We'll draw attention to the fact that it is a specific strain of E. coli, the 0157:H7 strain, that causes illness and death. This strain is far and away most often found in one place: the guts and feces of cattle being kept in close quarters and fed grain. If we blame the cattle, we'll force the dairy and produce industries to incur great costs to build bigger fences and move farther away from each other.

So, it must be the wild pigs, right? Wild animals are owned by nobody, accountable to nobody and generally considered a force beyond our control. If you were to read avian flu avian flu: see influenza.  news, you'd see the same thing: repeated, vague and unsupported attempts to implicate im·pli·cate  
tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates
1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot.

2.
 wild birds as the source of the disease. While, in reality, almost all human avian flu cases have been in workers in industrial-scale poultry plants.

MYTH 2: ORGANICS ARE MORE DANGEROUS

After the spinach outbreak, multiple news stories implied that organic farming organic farming, the practice of raising plants—especially fruits and vegetables, but ornamentals as well—without the use of synthetic pesticides, herbicides, or fertilizers.  is more likely to cause disease outbreaks because of the common use of "contaminant-laden manure" in organic growing practices. This was, at best, misinformation mis·in·form  
tr.v. mis·in·formed, mis·in·form·ing, mis·in·forms
To provide with incorrect information.



mis
 and, at worst a deliberate smear campaign smear campaign ncampaña de calumnias

smear campaign ncampagne f de dénigrement

smear campaign smear n
. It is true that organic and small-scale local growers may use manure where conventional growers use synthetic fertilizers. But, conventional growers use manure, as well, and they use it more freely than organic growers, who cannot apply raw manure after ninety days before harvest. Conventional growers may also apply processed sewage sludge (euphemistically called "biosolids biosolids

Sewage sludge, the residues remaining from the treatment of sewage. For use as a fertilizer in agricultural applications, biosolids must first be stabilized through processing, such as digestion or the addition of lime, to reduce concentrations of heavy metals and
") to their land, organic growers may not.

MYTH 3: FOOD SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY WILL SAVE US ALL

Remember the earlier quiz question? It implied that large-scale food growers and processors spend more money, time and care to ensure the safety of our food than do small-scale producers. This is, on average, true. But, does it make food from these commercial operations safer? When systems work well, maybe it does. But, when systems fail on a huge commercial scale, the damage is more widespread, harder to contain, harder to trace back to the source, more of a news story and, thus, more damaging to the livelihood of all farmers.

THE TAKE-HOME MESSAGE

Local family farms are likely not adjacent to huge commercial dairy operations, not processing products from multiple sources, not passing products through multiple hands and locations, and thereby hold little risk of causing an E. coli 0157:H7 outbreak. When food safety systems do fail on the local family farm selling to local customers, few people are impacted, and the problem can quickly be traced back to the source and addressed.

In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, buy local as much as you can, but don't stop buying fresh produce at the grocery store and at restaurants. This is where most of us buy most of our fresh food, and we should continue to do so. Food-safety scares are like airplane crashes: they get obsessive attention, while the 99.99 percent of the time that the product is delivered and consumed safely gets no press at all.

Part of what happens when we all get frightened by contamination scares, like the recent E. coli outbreak, is that the rules tighten for everyone, big and small, and your local family farmer has a harder time staying in business due to increased costs and customer fears. So, next time a food-safety scare hits, be vigilant and raise your voice in protest when small, local and/or organic farms get blamed or hurt by food industry disasters. And, vote with your wallet for a local solution: swallow your fear and keep eating that local, family-farmed spinach, headlines be damned.

Peter Marks Peter Marks is the Chief Executive of the British retailer the Co-operative Group. Background
Peter V Marks was born in Bradford in 1949. Career
Peter Marks first joined what became Yorkshire Co-operatives in 1967 as a management trainee in the Food Division.
 is the local food and farm coordinator for Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project (ASAP (chat) asap - As soon as possible. ). ASAP's Local Food Guide is available at area retailers and online at www.appabchiangrown.org.

Area Farmers'/Tailgate Markets in Full Swing

Alleghany County Farmers' Market Intersection, NC 18N Grayson St, Sparta, NC Sat 8am-12pm

Tailgate Markets at Greenlife, Greenlife Grovery, 70 Merrimon Ave, Asheville, NC Fri 2-6pm | Wed 1-5pm | Sun (grassy area off parking lot) 1pm-5pm, starts May 6th

French Broad Food Coop Tailgate Markets, 76 Biltmore Ave, Asheville, NC Sat 8am-1pm | Wed 2pm-6:30pm, starts May 2nd

West Asheville Tailgate Markets, rear of parking lot of West End Bakery and Haywood Road, Asheville, NC Wed 3:30-30pm, starts May 9th

North Asheville Tailgate Market parking lots behind Asheville Pizza, Merrimon Ave, Asheville, NC Sat 7am-12pm

Riceville Community Tailgate Market in the parking lot of the Riceville Community Center, Asheville, NC Sat 9am-12pm, starts June 2nd

Black Mountain Tailgate Market, Black Mountain, NC check www.AppalachianGrown.org for location Sat 9am-12pm, starts May 12th

Canton Tailgate Market, at the town hall in the municipal parking lot on Park St, Canton, NC Tue 8am-12pm | Thu 8am-12pm, starts June 5th

Cedar Valley Farmers' Market Downtown Murphy on the square, Murphy, NC Sat 10am-2pm

Franklin Tailgate Market The Franklin Tailgate Market is an outdoor farmers' market that takes place in downtown Franklin, North Carolina every Saturday. External links
  • The Franklin Tailgate Market website
 West Palmer Street Franklin, NC Sat 8am-12pm, starts June 2nd

Graham Henderson County Curb Market, Church SL Hendersonville, NC Tue, Thu, Sat 8am-2pm

Henderson County Tailgate Market, 100 N King St, Hendersonville, NC Sat 7am-12pm

Jackson County Farmer's Market, in the town parking lot at site of the Bridge Park, Cullowhee, NC Sat 9am-12pm, starts May 5th

Madison County Farmers' & Artisans' Market, Mars Hill College Mars Hill College is a private, coed, liberal-arts college affiliated with the North Carolina Baptist Convention. The college is located in the small town of Mars Hill, North Carolina, 15 miles due north of Asheville, western North Carolina's largest city. , off Dormitory Dr, Mars Hill, NC Sat 8am-1pm

Spruce Pine Farmers' Tailgate Market Topaz Street, Spruce Pine, NC Wed 3-6pm, starts May 9th

Transylvania County Tailgate market in the parking lot behind South Broad Park, Brevard, NC Tue, Thu & Sat 7:30am-1pm, starts May 12th

Waynesville Tailgate Market, corner of Walnut and Main, Weynesville, NC Wed & Sat 8am-12pm, starts June 6th

Saturday Market Downtown between Spring and Main Street Greenville, SC Sat 8am-12pm, starts May 5th

Simply Homegrown: A Community Market Parking lot of Pirate's Main Street Books, Clayton, GA Sat 9am-12pm, starts May 12th

For more information on each market, visit www.AppalachianGrown,org/taogate.php.
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Title Annotation:buy local
Author:Marks, Peter
Publication:New Life Journal
Date:May 1, 2007
Words:1472
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